AST Digital Magazine July 2017 Digital-July | Page 5

Volume 14 Mr. Shaw wanted the news media to know that Mr. Trump could have gone further when he called Mexican immigrants rapists and criminals. “I would have said they were murderers,” he said. Hailed for bravery, accused of racism, scorned as puppets, these are some of Mr. Trump’s most potent surrogates, the people whose private anguish has formed the emotional cornerstone of his crusade against illegal immigration and clouded the futures of America’s 11 million unau- thorized immigrants. Their alliance came down to this: To parents parched for understanding, Mr. Trump was a gulp of hope. The Trump campaign flew them to speak at ral- lies and at the Republican National Convention, put them up in Trump hotels and kept in touch with regular phone calls and messages. July 2017 Edition to vote on a bill that would intensify penalties for immigrants who re-enter the United States after being deported. The bill is named for a woman fatally shot by a man who illegally crossed the border at least five times. Sabine Durden, the mother of another victim, re- calls dropping to her knees and sobbing when she first heard Mr. Trump warn of the dangers of illegal immigration. Then his campaign called. “It was almost an out-of-body experience after being so deeply hurt and nobody listening and nobody wanting to talk to you about this,” she said. “It’s almost like I put on a little Superwoman cape because I knew I was fighting a worthwhile fight.” In Washington in April, they sat in the front rows as Mr. Trump’s homeland security secretary un- veiled an office for victims of crimes committed by unauthorized immigrants: of the many prom- ises the new president had made in their names, one of the first kept. (Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly announces the opening of the Victims of Immigrant Crime Engagement of- fice. Courtesy of PBS NewsHour and YouTube. Posted on Apr 26, 2017) After his victory, Mr. Trump invited at least one to the Inaugural Ball and seated three more with the first lady during his first address to Congress. Then and since, they have defended him on so- cial media and in the press, assuring the world that, with President Trump in office, their children will not have died in vain. This week, the House of Representatives plans To Mr. Trump’s critics, the office and the people it was supposed to represent were little more than pawns in his crude attempts to make monsters out of a largely law-abiding population — one that research has shown to commit crimes at a lower rate than native-born Americans. But here before the cameras, the secretary, John F. Kelly, was putting his hand over his heart and 5